Author Archives: Scott Bowles

’Lake George’ Worth The Dip


Lurasidone dosage

her response There’s a scene early in Lake George when Don (Shea Whigham), a weary ex-con assigned to off a mobster’s girlfriend, squints through the grime of a windshield that hasn’t been cleaned in years.

The camera holds long enough for you to wonder whether he’s even trying to see, or if he just prefers his world this way—filtered, fractured, and deliberately dirty. It’s one of the many small, deliberate touches in Jeffrey Reiner’s Lake George that sets the film apart from your typical crime thriller.

The setup is familiar: Don, fresh out of prison and riddled with a deep moral ambivalence, is sent to kill Phyllis (Carrie Coon), the whip-smart, world-weary moll of his boss.

What unfolds, though, is something grittier, slower, and more textured than a simple hit-gone-wrong. There’s violence, sure. There’s betrayal and paranoia.

But Reiner seems more interested in what happens between those beats: the way a character lights a cigarette with his off-hand because the dominant one is in a sling; the way Don half-limps down motel stairs, suggesting an injury we’ll never quite get explained; or the way no one ever bothers to clean a damn window in this world.

Those dirty windshields serve as more than atmosphere. They’re metaphor, mood, even mirror. Reiner shoots many scenes from inside cars, looking out through smudges and streaks, as if to suggest that clarity—of thought, of purpose, of truth—is perpetually just out of reach.

It’s a subtle choice, and one most films wouldn’t linger on, but here, it becomes almost a character in itself: the haze through which these people view each other and themselves.

Whigham is outstanding as Don, delivering a performance that’s all restraint and regret. He plays the role like a man who’s seen the worst parts of himself and is still figuring out if he deserves to be alive.

Coon matches him beat for beat, giving Phyllis a cunning softness that keeps you guessing which side she’s really on. The chemistry between them doesn’t sizzle so much as smolder—two people too damaged for flirtation, but drawn to each other’s wounds.

The pacing is deliberate—some might say slow—but Reiner earns it by layering his film with tension and atmosphere rather than plot twists. You don’t watch Lake George to find out what happens next; you watch to sit in its murky moral ambiguity, to appreciate the stillness between its bursts of violence.

This isn’t a movie for everyone. It resists easy resolution and offers little catharsis, particularly the finale.

But for those willing to watch through the dirt, Lake George offers a beautifully grimy view of redemption—uncertain, fogged over, and worth squinting at.

Dire And Back

In the annals of science fiction, resurrecting extinct creatures usually ends with a T. rex eating the tourists. But real science just pulled off a different kind of resurrection—with fur, fangs, and a name straight out of Westeros. Here are five genetically engineered FactSlaps about the return of the dire wolf:

1. Dire Wolves Are (Sort of) Back
Biotech firm Colossal Biosciences has created wolf pups that resemble the long-extinct dire wolf, using DNA pulled from fossils and tweaked with modern gene editing. It’s not cloning—it’s resurrection by redesign.

2. Born of Dogs, Named Like Legends
The three engineered pups—Romulus, Remus, and Khaleesi—were birthed by domestic dog surrogates. Yes, Khaleesi. Because if you’re bringing back ancient, oversized predators, why not make it official Game of Thrones canon?

3. They’re Not Wolves—And Never Were
Despite the name, dire wolves weren’t just beefier gray wolves. DNA shows they split from a common ancestor millions of years ago, evolving into a separate genus (Aenocyon), making them more cousin than clone.

4. These Pups Are CRISPR Creations
To mimic dire wolf traits, scientists edited 20 genes in gray wolf embryos, targeting body size, skull structure, and musculature. It’s not de-extinction. It’s de-extinctish.

5. From Fantasy to Field Test
Fans of Game of Thrones remember dire wolves as loyal beasts of war. But these real-life versions raise serious questions: Should we be reviving apex predators? Are we restoring ecosystems—or rewriting evolution?